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Palestine in the 1972 Egyptian Student Uprising: Arab Solidarities of Principle and Affect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2026

Reem Abou-El-Fadl*
Affiliation:
Department of Politics and International Studies, SOAS University of London , United Kingdom
*
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Abstract

In January 1972, Egypt’s university campuses were shut down by a wave of student protest, after President Anwar Sadat appeared to be abandoning plans for a military response to the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. The uprising, culminating in hundreds of arrests, marked the first significant mobilization against Sadat’s new regime and drew widespread public sympathy. Drawing on life history interviews, memoirs, press archives, lawyers’ records, and student publications, this article examines how solidarity with the Palestinian cause shaped the political formation of the Egyptian student movement and catalyzed its emergence. It argues that the students engaged in profoundly affective solidarity practices with Palestine, first in affirmation of longstanding Egyptian nationalist frameworks of opposition to Zionism, and further in contestation of wider political relations under Sadat. Whilst transnational solidarity features prominently in global histories of decolonization, it has rarely been used to interrogate Egyptian popular politics in the 1970s. By foregrounding Egyptians’ evolving affective solidarities with Palestine, this article challenges dominant narratives around the decline of Arab nationalism after 1967 and the rise of Islamism in its place. In doing so, the article reveals the complex dynamics of Egyptian-Palestinian relations over time, within a broader landscape of Arab and global anticolonial struggles.

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On 1 October 1970, over five million mourners overwhelmed the streets of Cairo for the funeral of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. A champion of anti-imperialist movements, he had died amidst preparations for a military reckoning with Israel, aimed at regaining the Arab territories occupied in the June 1967 War.Footnote 1 The same month, his successor, Anwar Sadat, informed Washington of his openness to a settlement instead and began the gradual but purposeful process of turning around the Egyptian ship.Footnote 2 By the end of the decade, Sadat had removed Egypt—the Arab world’s largest and most influential state—from the Arab-Israeli conflict by signing the 1978 Camp David Accords and 1979 Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. Thereafter, a powerful conventional wisdom formed, holding that Arab nationalism had been exposed in this period as an illusory, top-down unification project, having suffered a death blow in both state policy and popular estimation in 1967.Footnote 3 Complementing this came the view that Egyptians, once unburdened of the Arab nationalist myth, were easily converted to a conservative religious worldview, convinced by the Islamist critique of the ways of living and thinking of their recent past.Footnote 4 Egyptians were now captured in historiography as an ailing population, desperate for respite from the demands of the war economy, seeking refuge in God, and willing to put “Egypt first,” in Sadat’s famous words.Footnote 5 This was meant to explain the state’s ability to engineer popular acceptance of the Camp David settlement within a decade.Footnote 6

A different picture emerges by examining the dynamics of popular politics during the transition from Abdel Nasser to Sadat. When in January 1972, Sadat announced that he was postponing the decision for war, this led to furious, week-long sit-ins on every Egyptian university campus, bringing higher education nationwide to a halt.Footnote 7 The student movement uniformly demanded immediate military mobilization for a liberation war, and full pan-Arab support for the Palestinian Revolution—the political revival and armed resistance movement led by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) against Israeli settler colonialism. The students’ uprising immediately attracted widespread public sympathy, inspiring support statements from prominent professional syndicates and influential members of the intelligentsia.Footnote 8 It ended in mass arrests and the early closure of all Egypt’s universities for the mid-year vacation. The significance of the student revolt was confirmed a year later, in January 1973, when Sadat sought to pre-empt an anniversary protest by making targeted arrests of student leaders in Cairo. Thanks to a more organized campus presence this time, these set off a similar chain of events, only with greater numbers involved.Footnote 9 The campaign continued to resonate at the universities, amongst the intelligentsia, and in the press, unions, and professional syndicates, until Sadat’s decision to go to war in October 1973.Footnote 10 Veteran student leaders have worn this as a badge of honor ever since: they claim that their actions expedited the military confrontation with Israel, and that they had their finger on the national pulse throughout.Footnote 11

This article examines the role of Palestine solidarity in preparing for and triggering the Egyptian student uprising of 1972, which in turn contributed to Anwar Sadat’s decision to launch the October 1973 War against Israel. It draws on life history interviews, memoirs, press archives, lawyers’ records, and student publications to track the diverse solidarity practices in which students engaged after the 1967 Arab defeat to Israel—from political advocacy and organizing, to cultural festivals and fundraising, to strikes and protest mobilization.Footnote 12 As will be shown, this pattern appeared after the first student uprising of February 1968, which demanded accountability for the defeat from Abdel Nasser’s political and military establishment. With Sadat’s overtures regarding a settlement, Palestine activism duly intensified and increasingly vaunted the armed struggle model of the Palestinians, Cubans, and Vietnamese, whose example provided inspiration to leftist and anticolonial movements worldwide.Footnote 13 By 1972, it was overwhelmingly Palestine activists who were leading the network of Egypt’s campus occupations. This trajectory prompts certain questions: why did so many Egyptian students mobilize around a liberation war for both Palestinian and Egyptian lands, when Sinai had just been occupied, and Egypt’s anti-imperialist project destabilized? Why did they frame their collective action as ‘amal watani, a patriotic or nationalist act? What can this tell us about the fortunes of anticolonial nationalism in Egypt, with all its influence in the Arab world?

I argue firstly that the 1972 student movement sought to preserve and indeed radicalize a longstanding commitment to the Palestinian cause within Egyptian nationalist frameworks of opposition to Zionism, following the threat posed to this consensus by the Sadat regime. The students’ engagements with Palestine are conceptualized here as practices of affective solidarity, forged in the pursuit of shared principles and visions of anticolonial liberation, and through the shared emotional experiences of anticolonial struggle. These practices are situated within a decades-long history of Egyptian and Palestinian resistance to British and Zionist colonialism, as well as within the vast landscape of the Third World liberation wave. Taking this long view reveals the dynamism of Egyptian popular support to Palestinians and vice versa, varying with the posture of the Egyptian state, the strength of the Palestinian resistance, and the patterns of Israeli aggression. Looking spatially outwards shows the openness of Egyptian nationalist thought to comparable models of anticolonial experience, and the new processes of identification this could engender.

I further argue that the students’ Palestine solidarity became key to their contestation of wider political relations under Sadat, and their insistence on political participation in Egypt. The exceptional legitimacy and affective power of the Palestinian cause could be harnessed and circulate to other causes in moments of contention, which lent it great mobilizing and subversive potential. This dynamic helps explain the important role of student pressure in shaping the domestic context in which Sadat took the decision to go to war. To explore and find evidence for this, the article begins by reflecting on the interplay of principle and affect in solidarity, before considering this interplay over three “origin” periods for the uprising: the post-1930s construction of a national consensus on the question of Palestine, including the students’ formative years before university; the post-1967 period of soul-searching and campus activism during Abdel Nasser’s final years; and the dynamics of student mobilizations after Sadat came to power in 1970, culminating in the uprising of 1972.

In-depth scholarly evaluations of the 1972 student movement are few and have tended to foreground its internal dynamics, as opposed to the nationalist thread that connected it with public opinion off-campus.Footnote 14 Thus it has been analyzed as a matter of “youth” politics, or in terms of the conflicting gendered dynamics of social movements, or as a radical Marxist wave of competing tendencies.Footnote 15 By contrast, the question of Egyptians’ relations with Palestine has been considered an elite affair, in scholarship on the military confrontation of October 1973 and the role of strategy and perception in negotiations thereafter, culminating in the 1979 peace treaty.Footnote 16 Meanwhile, accounts of popular politics in the Sadat era have overwhelmingly focused on the rise of Islamism, including analyses of the student societies of the mid-1970s that became key to the resurgence of the Muslim Brotherhood and other strands of Egyptian Islamism.Footnote 17 This analysis aims to restore the 1972 student uprising to its place at the fore of a decade of contentious debates and mobilizations challenging the iconoclasm of Anwar Sadat. It was not the absence of such a popular nationalist trend, but rather its systematic repression in subsequent years, that ultimately facilitated the Camp David project.

Arab Solidarities of Principle and Affect

When I asked myself at that time why I left my school enthusiastically and why I was angry for this land which I never saw, I could not find an answer except the echoes of sentiment. Later a form of comprehension of this subject began…

- Gamal Abdel Nasser, 1953Footnote 18

The Arab-Arab and South-South affinities expressed in the 1972 student uprising have received little attention as phenomena of popular politics, even as transnational solidarity has become a prominent theme in global histories of decolonization. Where some of this literature has looked beyond state-centered self-determination projects to individual leaders’ political thought, I focus here on the practices of collectives, whose worldmaking proceeded from below.Footnote 19 How can we understand their claims to speak as Arabs, and their invocations of Arab national liberation? Political and social theorists have often pointed to the limits of shared geography, attributes, or historical experience as a basis for solidarity practice, insisting on principles and visions as key instead.Footnote 20 Human geographers also challenge the notion of “pre-existing commonality” as underpinning effective solidarity: their work examines solidarity across difference, and emphasizes that shared principles and visions have to be worked out continually and cumulatively in order to have effect.Footnote 21 I share this emphasis on the relational and agentive nature of principled solidarity—“a relation forged through political struggle which seeks to challenge forms of oppression”—as well as on its unfolding spatially through connections forged between places.Footnote 22 Accordingly, this article adopts the conceptual framework of solidarity to illuminate Egyptian students’ initiatives to connect with Palestinians on their own terms after 1967, and the new communities of belonging this built, alongside new political constellations to hold and represent them.

Engaging the role of affect, and the ways in which it can prompt and reinforce principled solidarity making, enhances this perspective. Indeed, doing so takes seriously the sentiments expressed consistently in all the student statements and life histories collected for this research, such as dignity, pride, sorrow, anger, and hope. Firstly, this approach recognizes that a principled commitment to solidarity is itself constituted by a range of sensibilities and impulses that move individuals to action. Affects and emotions may circulate between bodies, spaces, and signs to ensure continuity in social relations, but they may also be propelled into different configurations that produce new collectivities, such as when anger “shudders us into new ways of being,” in Sara Ahmed’s evocative words.Footnote 23 Clare Hemmings has described a similar process as “affective dissonance” between “self-narration and social reality,” which can lead to a desire for a transformation that will rectify injustice.Footnote 24 In the Egyptian case the students experienced affective dissonance between their collective sense of self as leaders of an Arab front and the reality of Israeli occupation, which spurred them to action.

Secondly, considering affect deepens our grasp of the symbolic registers through which the spatial politics of solidarity unfold. This can illuminate the specificity of the Arab-Arab cases of solidarity and nationalist identification considered here. This is because affects—whether named as emotions, or inchoate and eluding naming—take their force as much from longstanding cultural traditions and practices as from contingencies and conjuncture. Solidarities may thus be built by creative reference to, and engagement with, pertinent cultural signs and practices, and by mobilizing their associated affects.Footnote 25 Through such powerful associations, perceptions of shared struggle can inspire great personal sacrifice. In the Egyptian case, students’ solidarities flowed from principles, such as justice, which were nurtured affectively in the socio-cultural contexts and exchanges of the colonized Arab world and the wider anticolonial struggles of the Third World, as well as during confrontations with Sadat’s policy overhauls. This in turn evidences the translocal nature of solidarity connections, attending to the situatedness of certain affects in place but also their contingency on connections between places, and the cultural politics of these connections.Footnote 26 Drawing these strands together, popular Egyptian-Palestinian relations can be analyzed fruitfully through the lens of affective solidarity, highlighting both the construction of connection between people and places in pursuit of shared principles and visions, and the affective nature of this process.

Formation: Egypt as a Palestinian Political Field

In the name of the refugee, in the name of his rights in Palestine

In the name of our blood, of the martyrs, the fedayeen

Matalib Sha‘b [“A People’s Demands”], 1966

The Egyptian students who led the 1972 uprising were born with the July Revolution of 1952 and the Free Officers’ challenge to the British imperial order in Egypt. Palestine first entered their consciousness under the hegemony of the Nasserist state and its ideological programs, which framed liberation across the Arab world as a popular issue. At the same time, Palestine was an Arab cause that predated Abdel Nasser. His policies built on a tradition of grassroots solidarity that had grown in the 1930s, as Zionist settlement intensified and the theft of Palestinian land came to the attention of the Egyptian political class.Footnote 27 Egyptian public concern with Palestine also grew with the gains Egypt’s nationalists were able to make from British rule, and the pressure they were able to exert on Egyptian authorities to reflect the popular mood. This tradition became formative of a kind of politics of accountability with the state, generating expectations of support for the Palestinians.

There were precedents dating as far back as the 1920s for the Palestine solidarity practices of the 1970s student movement, from fundraising to political advocacy. In the 1920s, Egyptians engaged with Palestinian political affairs mainly through the issue of Islam’s holy sites. In 1929, during the violence over rights to the Western Wall in Jerusalem, the Egyptian Young Men’s Muslim Association (YMMA), founded in 1927, began fundraisers for Palestinian medical relief,Footnote 28 while secular Egyptian elites volunteered to provide representation.Footnote 29 In this period, the colonial politics of British pressure on Egyptian elites worked to subdue popular sentiment. However, by the 1930s, Egypt saw a swell of new organizations devoted to fostering Egypt’s Arab identity and ties, and a flurry of exchange and travel, particularly between Egyptians and Arabs of the Mashriq. With the regional rise of Arab nationalism, and the clearer implications of the British-backed Zionist project, popular Egyptian engagement increased.Footnote 30

In 1935, the Muslim Brotherhood took up the cause of Palestine, which its leadership correctly calculated would swiftly swell its ranks. With the Palestinian Arab Revolt of 1936–1939, the Brotherhood’s participation intensified, spanning Palestine-related preaching, solidarity statements and mass rallies, and the organization of committees to collect donations, through a structure founded with the YMMA.Footnote 31 Also vocal in protest was the Young Egypt Party, which condemned the 1937 Peel Partition Plan as another British imperialist scheme to divide the Arabs.Footnote 32 The Egyptian Feminist Union convened a Conference for the Defense of Palestine in 1938, in response to a call from Palestinian feminists, and collected donations,Footnote 33 as did various youth organizations—student groups from Al-Azhar and the Egyptian (later Cairo) University, and youth groups from the Nationalist and Saadist Parties.Footnote 34 The newly formed Wafdist youth held meetings with their Palestinian counterparts, whilst pro-Wafdist Egyptian and Palestinian scouting movements, which were independently adopting anticolonial nationalist politics, exchanged visits, and agreed on the need to resist European Jewish settlement.Footnote 35 Culturally, the press reflected Egyptians’ increasingly emotional responses to the struggle of the Palestinians, as an example to all Arabs and Muslims in the fight against imperialism, and as part of a united religious community.Footnote 36

The Egyptian and Palestinian political scenes became closely intertwined in the 1940s. Across the political opposition, there was growing recognition of the impact of a potential Jewish state in Palestine on Egypt’s political and economic affairs. Egypt’s communist movement—the political heritage of many 1970s student leaders—consistently opposed the Zionist colonization of Palestine, calling for Arab unity as early as 1929.Footnote 37 As many of its leaders were themselves Jewish, the communist movement also carefully distinguished between Egypt’s own Jews and the Zionist movement.Footnote 38 Nevertheless, when the Soviet Union endorsed partition in 1947, the communist Democratic Movement for National Liberation followed suit, generating consternation within the movement and a controversial legacy.Footnote 39 Meanwhile, on the right, the Brotherhood used its paramilitary “Special Apparatus” to target British figures, Egyptian parliamentary elites, and entire Egyptian Jewish neighborhoods, which they subjected to blanket accusations of Zionist sympathy. When the 1948 War for Palestine broke out, Brotherhood and Young Egypt members readily volunteered.Footnote 40

Palestine had clearly become a rallying cause across the political spectrum by the time of the 1948 War, which was a significant contributor to King Faruq’s decision to join it. Despite his and the Wafd government’s fears of British intervention, the king judged it both an opportunity and a necessity, as rival Arab leaders were making claims to playing a role in defending Palestine. Thereafter, Egyptian political actors persisted in competitive posturing over the issue of Palestine. When Faruq declared martial law, he seized the opportunity to arrest thousands in the leftist opposition, declaring them traitors to the Palestinian cause.Footnote 41 In December, a Brotherhood member assassinated Prime Minister Mahmoud al-Nuqrashi, accusing him of having betrayed both Egypt and Palestine when he outlawed the organization weeks earlier. After the Palestine War, Egypt’s poor performance became a national scandal and was blamed on “defective weapons”—left over from World War II—that the palace and military elites had supplied to Egyptian troops.Footnote 42 This experience deepened the polarization between Egyptians and their leaders and set the stage for the anti-British popular resistance of 1951–1952, in which veterans of the 1948 War from the Brotherhood, as well as communists, socialists, and leftist Wafdists all participated.

The July 1952 coup itself was partly compelled by the Free Officers’ understanding of the implications for Egypt of the Palestinian Nakba. Abdel Nasser was enduringly marked by his experience fighting in Palestine in 1948—where he began recruiting to the Free Officers—and its liberation was a prominent theme in his earliest official and private political discourse.Footnote 43 His only published book, The Philosophy of the Revolution, recounted his participation as a schoolboy in annual demonstrations against the Balfour Declaration. He described bitterly his experience of Egypt’s lack of preparedness for the war, and his conviction, while besieged in Fallujah, that the fate of the Palestinians awaited Egyptians if the status quo persisted.Footnote 44 Abdel Nasser’s popularity grew in large part from his projection of a worldview in which imperialist forces were a common foe, keeping the peoples of the Arab world, and the Third World beyond it, mired in underdevelopment. The solution he proposed lay in their unity, pooling sovereignty and resources in order to break free from their dependency on Europe and the United States, and to heal wounds such as that of Palestine.Footnote 45 This project saw the transformation of Cairo into a hub for Arab and Afro-Asian liberation movements, with the Palestinians among the first to receive support.Footnote 46

The Nasserist state nurtured citizens’ affective identification with Palestinians in terms of both kinship and the common pursuit of justice. Then in 1956, Egypt’s resistance to the Tripartite Aggression by Israel, Britain, and France in the Suez War cemented its nationalist opposition to the Zionist project, with the support of millions across the Arab world.Footnote 47 Egypt was transformed into a field of Palestinian political action during this time. Since the 1950s, there had been Palestinian student activism on campuses and growing recognition of Palestinian political and cultural affairs.Footnote 48 Abdel Nasser’s moves to offer Palestinians scholarships to study in Egypt, as well as the right to work, facilitated this, in stark contrast to regional states such as Lebanon.Footnote 49 Palestinian organizing in Cairo grew with the formation of the PLO in 1964, after an Arab League meeting held in Egypt in January. Since 1956, a Palestine program had been part of the popular pan-Arab radio broadcasting of Sawt al-‘Arab (“The Voice of the Arabs”) from Cairo.Footnote 50 In March 1965, the PLO was able to take this over and begin its own broadcasts using Egyptian resources.Footnote 51

Political ties between Egypt and Palestine were greatly enhanced through Abdel Nasser’s relations with the PLO. In May 1965, for example, Abdel Nasser made an unexpected address at the second session of the Palestine National Council (PNC). Egypt’s daily Al-Ahram quoted his affirmations that “Arab revolutionary action was the path to the liberation of Palestine,” that the Palestinian people were its “vanguard,” and that the people of Egypt were by their side.Footnote 52 By the late 1960s, PLO publications had become readily available in Cairo.Footnote 53 Young Egyptians now had access to Palestinian political and cultural output, as well as the astute Palestine analysis of left-leaning Egyptian magazines such as Al-Katib and Al-Tali‘a. Footnote 54 The former had been founded in 1961, published by the state’s Al-Tahrir publishing house, and headed by left-leaning Free Officers and ministers. The latter was published from 1965 by the state’s Al-Ahram publishing house, but produced by members of Egypt’s communist old guard. Its founding followed their release from prison, in return for the dissolution of their organizations and membership of the Arab Socialist Union (ASU).Footnote 55

State solidarity practice was enhanced by the affective power of the music, drama, and literature of the time, in what can be described as the “affective state” Abdel Nasser built.Footnote 56 On Radio Cairo, a popular repertoire of patriotic music filled the airwaves, aligning references to a joyful future for Egypt with others to the liberation of Palestine.Footnote 57 With state television in 1960, the reach of such cultural production was magnified. In cinema, the first film about Palestine had been made in 1948,Footnote 58 followed by productions such as 1957’s Ard Al-Salam (“Land of Peace”), in which stars Omar Sharif and Fatin Hamama played an Egyptian soldier and Palestinian refugee, united in struggle and later in love. Meanwhile, the poetry of Egyptians articulated affects of loss and hope with the Palestinian cause, as did the poems of Palestinians themselves, which were read widely.Footnote 59 This all formed part of the state’s broader anticolonial cultural project, celebrating Egyptian and global struggles for independence, and harnessing Egyptian and translated literature alike.Footnote 60

For the majority of the 1972 protagonists, this official culture of anticolonial nationalism enjoyed a relatively secure hegemony until 1967. Although there were differences of class, gender, geographical origin, and political experience among them, the place of Palestine in their early political consciousness was remarkably consistent. A significant group of early 1970s organizers were graduates of Egypt’s Socialist Youth Organization branches, which had been established in schools and university faculties in 1966.Footnote 61 While these aimed at organizing young people into loyalist groups, they nevertheless offered members a rigorous political education in the ideologies and praxis associated with the state’s recently espoused “Arab socialism.”Footnote 62 A smaller number of 1970s leaders were members of fledgling clandestine Marxist groups. They had broken with the previous generation’s accommodation to Nasserism and their acceptance of Palestine’s partition.Footnote 63 They were simultaneously critical of Abdel Nasser for his state’s bourgeois authoritarianism and appreciative of his anti-Zionist position. These groups’ broad agreement on the injustice of the situation in Palestine continued well into the 1970s as new groups began to form.Footnote 64

In marked contrast, by far the largest group of student activists were not politically organized: as Cairo University Arts graduate Hayat al-Shimi put it, “we were the majority, millions!”Footnote 65 She had been most influenced by the nationalist education system and its allied cultural production, which had nurtured in her cohort a powerful affective identification with the Palestinian cause. Others included those from the Suez Canal area, who had suffered forced internal migration due to the 1967 War and evacuation during the 1969–1970 War of Attrition with Israel. Nearly one million Egyptians in total were forcibly displaced from Port Said, Ismailiyya, and Suez.Footnote 66 As Cairo Arts graduate Muhammad al-Baghdadi recalls, this transformative experience disposed them to political and even militant action with fellow Egyptians against the Israeli occupation.Footnote 67 They began their university years with a clear sense of the unity of their cause with that of the Palestinians.

Campus Organizing after 1967: Seeking “A New Way”

Arriving at university in cohorts from 1968 to 1971, the 1972 student leaders had all undergone the traumatic moral shock of the 1967 War. It was during this period that many experienced the affective dissonance that would radicalize them. When Abdel Nasser resigned on 9 June, most joined the demonstrations calling on him to stay but had already been plunged into a state of deep and anguished reflection. In different ways, these students felt a disconnect between what they thought they knew—about Egypt’s place in the Arab world and its capacity to support the Palestinians and other oppressed peoples—and what they learned after the defeat—that Egypt was now on the defensive. This experience transformed many future activists from Nasserists, or even “semi-Nasserists” as Cairo University Political Science graduate Hani Shukrallah put it, to seekers of a new way.Footnote 68 Declaring themselves Marxists, students like him sought a genuine socialist transformation in Egypt and criticized the state as bourgeois and conservative. Others maintained their faith in the state project but wished for more meaningful political participation.Footnote 69 Contrary to several accounts of post-1967 Egypt, the defeat did not transform the majority naturally into Islamists.Footnote 70 As its leaders recall, the nascent Islamist presence on the early 1970s campuses was small and focused on pious practice initially, advocating a return to God as the solution to Egypt’s problems.Footnote 71 Whilst keeping their distance from nationalist groups’ activism accordingly, Palestine nevertheless remained a regional issue of common concern.Footnote 72 Across the spectrum, Egyptian students found the Palestinian issue to be both a mirror and a mobilizer for them. There soon followed enthusiastic student engagement with the ideal of armed struggle as the route out of the Arabs’ post-1967 predicament.

The defeat had brought about a new material reality—the occupation of Sinai—which deepened the affective bonds between Egyptians and Palestinians forged in resistance to Zionism. According to Shukrallah, in his cohort, “The association between [the loss of] Sinai and Palestine was almost identical.”Footnote 73 Affects long related to Palestine now circulated in connection with Egypt’s changed realities. The students recognized that the injustice of the Palestinian situation was now engulfing Egypt and blighting their own futures, which looked set to feature extended military service, deferred employment, and wartime austerity.Footnote 74 Given this entanglement, students reasoned that supporting the Palestinians was a matter of self-preservation. As former Youth Organization member, Engineering graduate, and leftist uprising leader Ahmad Bahaa’ Sha‘baan wrote in 1976: “The plan for the elimination of the Palestinian Revolution … is the rehearsal for more moves to abort all our dreams of victory. … Therefore the solidarity movement with the Palestinian Revolution had to continue and affirm its identity day after day, crystallizing in continuous influential forms and activities. …”Footnote 75 This recognition compelled many, whether Marxist or Nasserist inclined, to innovate new channels for engagement with Palestine, and to think and organize more independently of the state.

University campuses provided the ideal environment for nationalist organizing, given students’ mounting efforts to create a space for political expression in the wake of 1967. In February 1968, students had rebelled for the first time since the 1951–1952 mobilizations of students and workers against the British occupation, which had featured student participation in guerrilla fighting in the Suez Canal Zone.Footnote 76 The trigger was popular anger at the government’s handling of the defeat, and its outcome was a determination to organize independently of official organizations on campus.Footnote 77 A student leader in both 1968 and 1972 was Zayn Al-Abidin Fuad, son of Cairo’s popular quarters and vernacular poet of their people’s struggles, himself an early communist recruit. As he recalls, this was the “emergence” moment, with small leaderships forming in different faculties, supplanting the Youth Organization.Footnote 78 Politicized students like him built on this, producing “wall magazines”—articles and artwork copied onto large sheets and mounted on faculty walls to trigger discussion—and founding student societies to sustain their critique.Footnote 79 Their analyses consistently made the link between the loss of Egyptian and Palestinian lands and the antidemocratic nature of the government.

Indeed, as early as June 1967, future student leaders began to realize the limitations of their peers’ understandings of the struggle against Israel: “We discovered through these debates their poor knowledge of the enemy and even its geography. …”Footnote 80 They blamed the state’s seeming monopoly on expressions of support for Palestine, but also their own consent. As Shukrallah put it, “Palestine was always the heart of Arabism, the stolen land, the national humiliation, the Arab wound, but we only got to know Palestinians themselves with the resistance.”Footnote 81 This was another kind of affective dissonance, generating a desire to close this gap between their self-image as the Palestinians’ comrades and the reality of their deference to the state in this regard. Of course, the Egyptian leadership had itself embraced the Palestinian armed struggle in this period—Cairo hosted the fourth Palestine National Council session in July 1968.Footnote 82 According to Egypt’s strategy—which evolved into the Attrition War of 1969–1970—Egyptian commando operations against Israel would prevent the ceasefire lines from becoming a de facto border, while Egypt rebuilt its army. Egypt would coordinate with Palestinian groups within this context. In this sense, as the students began looking to Palestinian freedom fighters as nationalist role models, they were not stepping that far outside the state’s orbit.

Several students now resolved to educate themselves about the Palestinian Revolution, the most attractive aspect of which was its defiant militancy. They eagerly followed press coverage on the different guerrilla factions’ activities. A key experience here was the 21 March 1968 battle at the town of Karama in the Jordan Valley, in which the young guerrillas of Fateh supported Jordanian troops in inflicting heavy losses on the Israeli army.Footnote 83 Al-Ahram called it “the most dangerous military operation since the June war” and described the Palestinian fighters’ bravery in resisting Israel’s attacks.Footnote 84 Karama—meaning “dignity”—had occurred within weeks of the public outcry over the government’s handling of 1967 and acquired mythical status due to the imbalance of forces on the ground. It duly inspired animated discussion in the press and on campus around the merits of regular versus people’s war. The event catapulted Fateh to regional acclaim and boosted the credibility of the Palestinian national movement. Indeed, Karama had precipitated the first meeting between Abdel Nasser and Fateh leaders Yasser Arafat, Salah Khalaf, and Faruq al-Qaddumi, after which military support and intelligence sharing began.Footnote 85

For many students, whilst Abdel Nasser was developing a dual strategy of regular and popular warfare, it was the latter that fired their imaginations. As then Engineering student and later Palestine organizer Ahmad Hisham recalls, “Although the Ras al-‘Ish battle of 1 July 1967, Egyptian air strikes on the Israelis in Sinai on 14-5 July, and strikes on Eilat on 21 October had partially restored confidence in the army, they did not restore our belief in the claim that we were the strongest army in the region, nor in our ability to retake the land.” He continues: “I had a latent awareness, following the February 1968 protests, that the regular army would not work against Israel, and that we needed popular resistance instead: Karama affirmed this.”Footnote 86 As Bahaa Sha‘baan put it, Karama was “an objective response to the defeat: a fighting people, a genuine fida’i confrontation with the enemy.”Footnote 87 His words harkened back to Egypt’s fida’i operations against the British in Suez, years before the Palestinian Revolution. Just two months after Karama took place, Fateh was reporting an influx of volunteer applications, including up to 20,000 students and soldiers from Egypt.Footnote 88 In December 1968, Al-Tali‘a’s editor, socialist intellectual Lutfi Al-Khuli, noted this expansion with effusive praise, attributing it to Fateh being the most responsive Palestinian resistance to the needs of its time, hence its celebration throughout the Third World.Footnote 89 Reading this kind of analysis, Shukrallah recalled: “the Karama Battle was for so many of my generation a moment of transition: ‘no, there is another way.’”Footnote 90

The same students looked for further inspiration to Vietnam and Cuba, whose examples underlined the attraction of the guerrilla strategy, and with whose defiance of U.S. imperialism they identified. Here they drew on the leftist press, which ran features on “the necessity of armed struggle,” discussing “sources of inspiration” from Ho Chi Minh and Che Guevara to Frantz Fanon and Stokely Carmichael.Footnote 91 Meanwhile, the Palestinian Revolution’s own support for the Vietnamese and Cuban experiences reinforced this message. In August 1970, the PLO factions had declared: “We must make the Middle East a second Vietnam to defeat Zionism and imperialism. …”Footnote 92 Student societies duly invited embassy officials, journalists, and writers to speak on campus, and wrote their own endorsements in wall magazines. As Bahaa Sha‘baan explains, the students reasoned that “if a poor peasant people had confronted the mightiest imperialism in history, we too could win.” Meanwhile, Cuban icon Che Guevara offered a “noble model of self-sacrifice, leaving the temptations of life and position behind, to respond to the call of revolution.”Footnote 93 For these students, meanings of “revolution” now migrated away from the July state of Abdel Nasser to connote instead a robust people’s army of anticolonial insurgents across the globe.

Whilst the Palestinian Revolution seemed to offer a confident answer to the question of how and with whom to resist Israeli occupation, there were ambiguities in the students’ understanding of the exigencies of a people’s war. Many students had an attitude infused with significant idealism and rapture at the Vietnamese example. At Alexandria University, Engineering student leader Galal Maqlid recalled “causing a storm” by criticizing Mohamed Hassanein Heikal, Al-Ahram’s powerful managing editor, who had downplayed the idea of popular warfare as capable of victory alone.Footnote 94 In this period, 1967–1968, the official press was supporting the government’s dual strategy of rebuilding the army while using guerrilla tactics.Footnote 95 Maqlid wrote his riposte in his first wall magazine article, which “[he claims] took the faculty out of the state of fear, quietism, and anxiety that had accompanied the events of November [1968].”Footnote 96 Recalling such events today, Maqlid and his comrades candidly note that their understanding at the time of how a people’s war could be waged specifically in the Egyptian context was limited: they were above all concerned with establishing the principle.Footnote 97

Communist student leader Zayn al-Abidin Fuad offered a slightly different perspective, insisting that he and his comrades invoked a people’s war as a way of pressing for popular participation and of criticizing the corruption that had occurred within the army leading up to 1967, rather than as an alternative to its forces.Footnote 98 Fuad recalled that in 1969, Vietnamese General Võ Nguyên Giáp’s People’s War, People’s Army (1961) was a bestseller in Cairo, after the General Book Organization’s publication of an affordable translation. Fuad toured Egypt with its translator, Tahir Abdel Hakim, to present it and read poetry to audiences from the intelligentsia. His view chimes with Al-Tali‘a’s treatment of the subject, covering its history as a national tradition since the Napoleonic invasion of 1798, its theory as part of a dynamic all-terrain battle alongside the army, and its currency through the law establishing “Popular Defence Army” units in October 1968.Footnote 99

As the students thus engaged creatively but differently with the prospect of popular warfare, the affective power of events like Karama moved them to engage in a flurry of political education and organizing around Palestine, which ultimately generated new structures on campus. A case in point of this arc of solidarity was the Partisans of the Palestinian Revolution Society (PPRS), based in Cairo University’s Engineering Faculty. It originated in conversations amongst Engineering students following the reopening of universities in January 1969, two months after the November 1968 demonstrations.Footnote 100 These revolved around the Youth Organization and Students Union’s failure as vehicles for student interests, prompting a need for new organizations. Rashiq Rifaat’s vision was for a social forum with a large base, whilst Alaa Bakish imagined a small and cohesive group. Rifaat set up a student society called Al-Singab (“The Squirrel”); Bakish formed the Culture and Arts Appreciation Society.Footnote 101

Al-Singab took up the mantle of Palestine activism in Engineering, which soon became a model for other faculties. One of its opening events came on the initiative of younger student Ahmad Hisham and commemorated the first anniversary of the Karama Battle. The students sought out their Palestinian peers at university, as well as senior members of the resistance in Cairo to speak. Hisham, Rifaat, and fellow Engineering student Layla Basim began by inviting the General Union of Palestinian Students representative in Cairo, Sakhr Bseiso, and the ASU Secretary in Giza, Farid Abd al-Karim. Next, they organized fundraisers for the Palestinian fighters: donations were gathered from students, but also from workers at the nearby battery and Matossian cigarette factories in Giza, who insisted on donating their entire day’s wages rather than the quarter suggested.Footnote 102 Bakish recalls the students’ surprise: it “showed us that there was a very developed feeling at the time regarding the common enemy of Egyptians and Palestinians.” He notes: “The total donations were huge, whether from workers, academics or students, and surpassed tens of thousands. …”Footnote 103 In what became a week-long celebration of the Palestinian Revolution, the students convened a conference in the Engineering Faculty’s Al-Saawi Lecture Theatre on 21 March, with Bseiso and Abd al-Karim as speakers.

Hisham continued making concerted efforts to meet with Fateh leaders in Cairo: “On 31 December 1969, I went to the Palestinian Students Union in Gawad Husni Street, after I learned that Abu Ammar was going to be present, to commemorate the Palestinian Revolution’s fourth anniversary. Abu Ammar, Abu Iyad and Abul Lutuf were all present. I spent New Year’s Eve listening to stories of revolution. …”Footnote 104 Such activities bridged the learned affects of loss and anger associated with the injustice in Palestine, and the students’ own joyful defiance and enthusiasm, which they now articulated with feelings of dignity in the Palestinian struggle. The leftist press had continued to nurture this trajectory with a flow of articles celebrating the figures and perspectives of the Palestinian Revolution in 1969–1970.Footnote 105 Less than a year after their founding, Al-Singab and the Culture and Arts Appreciation Society joined to commemorate the launch of the Palestinian Revolution on 1 January 1970, and Karama on 31 March.

In a sign of their enthusiasm, Hisham and several other Al-Singab members organized a Cairo Engineering students fieldtrip to Jordan in June 1970. For these five men and two women, the ostensible goal was training, but their genuine motivation was to get to know the Palestinian struggle and its heroes. Hisham describes his euphoria at arriving in “Amman, the Hanoi of the Arabs,” and being near Al-Aghwar, the Palestinian fighters’ base. It was exhilarating “to see the military vehicles driven by fedayeen, the images of martyrs on the buildings, and the flags of the Palestinian factions. …”Footnote 106 These students’ time in Jordan ended with a sense of foreboding, however, as King Hussein’s brutal campaign against the fedayeen began. In the days after, they followed in disbelief the news of the Jordanian army’s massacres of Palestinians in refugee camps, which became known as Black September.Footnote 107 This experience produced further affective dissonance, between their self-narration as part of an Arab unity, upholding Palestinian rights, and the reality of Arab duplicity, causing Palestinian deaths. Condemning this betrayal would become a recurrent trope in the students’ activism.

On his return, Hisham came upon a 1969 pamphlet by senior PLO leader Faruq Al-Qaddumi entitled “The Palestinian Revolution as an Axis for the Arab Cause.” What the Revolution needed from the Arab world, he wrote, was the formation of groups to support it: “What is asked of the youth of the Arab nation is not that they join the revolution’s ranks as fighters, but rather that they understand the nature of the conflict with the Zionist enemy—as a civilisational and long-term conflict, where victory will come to those who remain steadfast—and that they protect, embrace, and preserve the Palestinian Revolution, as pivotal to the Arab cause. …”Footnote 108

Hisham promptly applied to form the Palestine Revolution Partisans: in October 1970 he secured the faculty student union’s permission to launch it, and publish its wall magazine, Al-Thawra (“Revolution”). The PPRS gathered a relatively small and already politicized group of vocal and talented students, including future uprising leaders Bahaa Sha‘baan and Siham Sabri.Footnote 109 The founders’ move from traveling to Jordan uninvited, to responding to a clear Palestinian call for a specific kind of support, reflects the maturation of their solidarity practices. The PPRS soon superseded al-Singab as its Wednesday meetings began to attract larger crowds, both in Engineering and beyond.Footnote 110

The affective surges that moved the students to action on these issues were nurtured through the cultural and artistic modes in which they pursued their solidarities. Public performance and singing in concert became a key mobilizing practice in the students’ repertoire, spreading political awareness and building affective ties on campus. The symbols and news of faraway causes were interpreted through the creative local comparisons and cultural frames of Egyptian and Arab artists.Footnote 111 For example, news of Che Guevara’s execution in 1967 came just as Egyptians confronted their own trauma and was treated by the students as “a heroic martyrdom.”Footnote 112 Emblematic of this was the dirge Guevara Maat (“Guevara is Dead”), composed by the underground leftist duo singer-songwriter Sheikh Imam and poet Ahmad Fu’ad Nigm, who performed frequently to audiences of rebellious students.Footnote 113 For Engineering student leader Kamal Khalil, a Youth Organization graduate turned communist, the first time he read this poem left a profound impression. It had been handwritten and pinned to a tree on campus, causing him to search for those who had displayed it to learn more.Footnote 114 He describes the kind of energizing joy sparked by finding friends one never knew one had—a solidarity that eclipsed his sense of affective dissonance.

A similar Nigm-Imam classic was the rousing Ya Falastiniyya (“O Palestinians”) of 1969, which expressed Egyptians’ longing to join the armed struggle and wove in the inspiration of Vietnam: “O Palestinians/ Vietnam is your omen/ Rising in victory/ From a hundred thousand raids/ With the candle lit/ The Americans defeated/ They’re returning, bewildered/ Here’s to your turn.” Alongside Nigm and Imam, the popular group Awlad Al-Ard (“Children of the Land”) from Suez would also frequently come to campus, offering their own regional musical style and representing “the voice of the popular resistance.”Footnote 115 Such artistic and cultural practices built an emotive tradition that could be tapped at high-stakes moments such as 1972.

Sadat and the Massification of Protest

The ideas of the Palestine Revolution Partisans spread around the university, then went beyond it to spread through most of Egypt’s universities, ultimately forming a powerful momentum … a storm which uprooted the trend of indifference, cynicism, and fear, as soon as the objective conditions arose. …

Ahmad Bahaa Sha‘baan, 1976Footnote 116

The death of Abdel Nasser was the event that towered over the start of the 1970 academic year, and the matriculation of the youngest student leaders of 1972. Most of them joined Abdel Nasser’s historic funeral on 1 October and began their studies just days later. For millions, his death—part-way through preparations for a liberation war—compounded the crisis of 1967. Egyptian students soon found themselves confronting Anwar Sadat’s new regime, in which the quest for national liberation no longer trumped political freedoms but now appeared just as gravely under threat. The students’ anger and frustration, already associated with the injustice of the loss of Palestine, and having already circulated to the Egyptian context after 1967, now did so again with Sadat, intensifying their sense of affective dissonance. This was now embodied in statements and collective actions targeting the Egyptian state. No longer primarily the focus of a dynamic solidarity relation against Israel, Palestine now helped crystallize, galvanize, and massify student campaigns for political and social freedoms at home.

Sadat’s break with Nasserism began early: in February 1971, he had publicly and unilaterally proposed the reopening of the Suez Canal in return for partial Israeli withdrawal.Footnote 117 This entrenched a feud with members of the political elites still loyal to Abdel Nasser’s policies, prompting Sadat to remove them in his “Corrective Revolution” of May 1971. The name was carefully chosen: on the one hand, the regime asserted its own revolutionary credentials in continuity with Egypt’s recent past and with the wider anticolonial present. On the other, it was a thinly veiled retort to the July Revolution, given that it required correcting through such a violent purge of erstwhile comrades. Constructive ambiguity was indeed Sadat’s modus operandi in this phase. Whilst imprisoning many senior Free Officers, Sadat retained others for careful balance and acceded to Soviet requests for reassurances, signing a Soviet-Egyptian friendship treaty on 27 May.Footnote 118 He also appointed Marxists from the Al-Tali‘a circle, playing on their differences with Free Officer “centrists.”Footnote 119 Sadat endeavored to chart a new path to legitimacy through the language and limited measures of liberalization. Further restrictions on student organizing were lifted, from campus police involvement to the tutelage of teaching staff.Footnote 120 Sadat’s earliest changes were thus carefully calibrated, leaving observers in some consternation as to his intentions at first.

The students, however, were quick to react: the transition from Abdel Nasser to Sadat triggered an equally sharp shift in the rationale and momentum of their organizing. Whilst most of these students had vigorously criticized the state’s methods throughout the late 1960s, they now reaffirmed its nationalist claims. The first and only printed version of the PPRS wall magazine, Al-Thawra (“Revolution”), published in January 1971, reflects the students’ early sense of affective dissonance amidst Sadat’s changes. Comprising thirty-two A5 pages, its “Statement Number One” focused on the loss of Abdel Nasser and the need for popular forces to reassume the responsibility he had carried whilst in power. It affirmed the centrality of the Palestinian Revolution, and the need for a people’s war.Footnote 121 The illustrations reflected the artists’ soaring hopes for the cause—a galloping horse and a fida’i with a rifle, both under a blazing sun. Conveying this sense of movement and agency from below, the article insisted that “our Arab masses had to take up their decisive role in defending the revolutionaries, not only against Israel but against treasonous Arabs, and against all efforts to harm our revolution, the revolution of the struggling Palestinian people.”Footnote 122 PPRS organizing underlined these themes in practice: in March 1971, it established the “Week of Support for Worldwide Liberation Movements,” alongside its commemoration of the Karama Battle, screening films and inviting representatives of Cairo-based liberation movements to speak, from Vietnam, Angola, and Cape Verde, alongside the PLO.Footnote 123

Dozens of student societies now sprang up on campus: the numbers of students they attracted made this a qualitatively different phase of affective solidarity from what had gone before. Although influential accounts such as that of Political Science graduate and student leader Ahmed Abdalla have often cited the PPRS in isolation, not least due to its role in sparking the 1972 protests, it was by no means the only organization celebrating the Palestinian Revolution on Egyptian campuses in the early 1970s. In the Faculty of Arts, Zayn al-Abidin Fuad recalls having begun a Palestinian Revolution Week in 1970 and comments that “in 1971 and 1972 the numbers involved were huge—in 1972 I counted over fifty faculties [involved], from Assiut to Alexandria.”Footnote 124 At Cairo University, student societies or “families” included “Gawad Husni” at the Engineering Faculty, the “Egypt” and “Abdullah Al-Nadim” societies at the Arts Faculty, “Abd Al-Hakam Garrahi” at the Economics and Political Science Faculty, and “Abd Al-Magid Mursi” at the Agriculture Faculty, many of them named after martyred Egyptian nationalists.Footnote 125 At Ain Shams University, similar events were run by the “Anti-Imperialist Society” at the Faculty of Medicine, amongst others.Footnote 126 According to Hisham, with the Palestinian Revolution’s rising profile, even after the PLO’s expulsion from Jordan in 1970–1971, “ordinary people began to be interested—because we all oppose Israel—and they effected the transformation to a popular movement. …”Footnote 127

Through their Palestine organizing, the students forged the relations and autonomous structures that would become key to expressing their broader grievances against the regime. Their demands in substance thus drove their realization in form. As Khalil recalls, the main difference between 1968 and 1972 was the cumulative nature of the 1972 uprising, having developed through widening organization and debate on campus, unlike the swift boiling over and containment of 1968, which had moved to the streets straight away.Footnote 128 At this point, the most influential political organizing was led by budding Marxists, only few with connections to emerging clandestine groupsFootnote 129 but all in agreement on the Palestinian cause. That said, Ahmad Bahaa’ Sha‘baan notes that the key reason for the superior organizing of the PPRS was the prior training of several of its leaders and cadres in the Socialist Youth Organization.Footnote 130

On the eve of the student uprising, hundreds of students had just taken part in one of the most vibrant Palestine Weeks yet, held across Egypt’s different campuses in December 1971. At Cairo University, the Student Union’s Cultural and Political Committee had released a statement that prefigured the demands of the following month’s uprising. Its language revealed the students’ vision for “Arab liberation” as a victory over Israel, but also over any unrepresentative Arab regime, whose illegitimacy was manifest in its betrayal of the Palestinians. Meanwhile, “revolution” was the means, understood as armed struggle bolstered by popular Arab mobilization and political representation:

We, Cairo University students, declare that:

  • 1. The Palestinian Revolution is the vanguard of the armed popular struggle for the achievement of a final victory against the Zionist presence in Israel;

  • 2. The only formula for the formation of a front for the Palestinian Revolution in confronting the threats it faces is armed struggle against the enemy;

  • 3. The isolation and exposure of the treasonous Jordanian regime is a necessity for the victory of the Arab revolution in its struggle for liberation;

  • 4. Arab popular support for the Palestinian Revolution, fighting on all Arab fronts [with Israel], and mobilization of our masses, is the only formula for victory.

The critical juncture came when Sadat gave a speech on 13 January 1972, announcing that Egypt would not be launching its liberation war that year as expected, due to a “fog” in the international climate caused by the Indo-Pakistani war. A furious student reaction spread instantly across Egyptian universities. That day, a relatively unknown student named Sami Al-Brins wrote an article entitled “Mr. President, If Only You Had Not Spoken” in the wall magazine The Battle: it expressed the sentiments of hundreds, who gathered to discuss it.Footnote 131 As Shukrallah recalls: “I arrived to find the walls of our floor completely covered in magazines, brought by regular students … by non-activist groups. …”Footnote 132

As it happened, between 16 and 18 January, the students had organized a three-night poetry reading off campus featuring Palestinian poets Muin Bseiso and Mahmud Darwish, alongside student activist-poet Zayn Al-Abidin Fuad.Footnote 133 As the angry wall papers proliferated, the event provided a space from which to plan next steps. At Cairo, the initiative came from the Palestine Partisans, who called an Engineering Faculty student conference for 17 January. They announced a larger conference on 19 January, and a sit-in to begin if no government response was forthcoming. This then began on 18 January, after the press ignored their statements. Meanwhile, similar meetings had taken place in Medicine and Political Science, which decided to support the Engineering sit-in decision. In this way, the movement grew across all Egypt’s university campuses: Cairo, Ain Shams, Alexandria, Assiut, and Al-Azhar.

Through the protests, the students began crystallizing their vision for armed struggle against Israel. In the 17 January congress, Engineering students insisted on the arming of ordinary citizens, and the military training of students “to serve as a rearguard to the regular forces in case of war.”Footnote 134 They further demanded disengagement from U.S.- or United Nations-sponsored peace plans, and “cutting off the godfather of the enemy, U.S. imperialism.”Footnote 135 Amidst the escalating protest, the affects of anger and defiance that had tied the students to the Palestinian cause now surged in relation to the Egyptian situation, emboldening them to call out political relations in Egypt. A key instance was ASU Youth Secretary Kamal Abul Magd’s visit to the gathering, where he faced the students’ insistent questioning and left conceding that he had no answers.Footnote 136 The students then rebuffed government offers to train them merely for the protection of civilians.Footnote 137 By 21 January, university buildings were filled with posters proclaiming emotive slogans such as “We Die and Egypt Lives,” which came from Egypt’s 1919 uprising, alongside others like “Cut Ties with the Butcher of Amman,” in reference to King Hussein’s war on the Palestinian fedayeen, and, finally, “The Political Solution Does Not Exist,” which they elaborated “ends the state of war at a time when Arab lands are still occupied.”Footnote 138 At Ain Shams, the same demands were made, including support for the Palestinian Revolution. The students specifically demanded the release of four Palestinians who had assassinated Jordanian Prime Minister Wasfi Al-Tal in Cairo in November 1971 for his leading role in Black September.Footnote 139 These slogans and demands reflected the students’ ongoing concern both with Palestine solidarity, expressed here in an Arab nationalist frame, and with Egypt’s own conflict with Israel.

Simultaneously, the protests underlined the need for democratic institutions, as the students self-consciously built representative structures themselves. The Faculty of Arts Committee statement made the protests’ dual dimension clear: “The cause of the battle is linked to the cause of democracy. We demand the lifting of all forms of tutelage on the unions and political organizations of the masses, and we demand the freedom of the press. …”Footnote 140 The students’ prior Palestine organizing had laid firm foundations for the novel representative structures of the uprising. At the 19 January meeting, the most politically experienced students—all of them Palestine activists—quickly suggested the election of new student committees in every faculty, to represent this unprecedented gathering and thereby eclipse the student union structure. As Kristin Ross has written of May 1968 in France, “students and other social groups could only become politicized if the forms of organization and political militantism currently available were themselves radically restructured.”Footnote 141 The faculty committees decided to elect one Higher National Committee of Students (HNCS), recalling the anticolonial struggle of the 1946 National Committee of Students and Workers and sharing in its historic legitimacy.Footnote 142 The HNCS went on to supervise the larger sit-in in Cairo University’s main hall and was declared the students’ sole representative in liaising with the authorities.

With great speed, the HNCS leaders put together a central “Students’ Document,” making copies using university printers on 20 January and distributing them in working class areas and on campus.Footnote 143 The strongly worded statement began with a critique of the government’s undemocratic “concealing of the truth” behind slogans such as “deterrence” and “decisiveness,” and then demanded a rejection of UN Resolution 242, the establishment of a genuine war economy, the military training of students, and the mobilization of workers and peasants. Fuad clarified the students’ demands for popular military preparedness as a necessary support to, and check on, the army’s activities, and a way of ensuring “an army in the street” in case of war.Footnote 144 The document was approved by a mass vote in the rapturous sit-in the same day, to be delivered to the presidency by a delegation of committee members. Its language and form were then echoed almost exactly across Cairo University faculty statements, from Engineering to the Arts.Footnote 145 These were also now signed uniformly: “Absolute sacrifice for the nation, absolute democracy for the people.” The phrase, coined by leading HCNS member Ahmed Abdalla, distilled their grievances clearly into the twin causes of national and political freedoms.Footnote 146

The students’ prior organizing had not only given them the institutional bases from which to call such action, but also the representational legitimacy to make their claims. This made it harder for Sadat to reduce them to a delinquent and foreign-backed minority, as he attempted to do in successive speeches.Footnote 147 The HNCS was empowered by the large numbers who had amassed behind it and now moved to take up the position of national representative. As a condition of the sit-in’s closure, the document insisted that the university recognize the HNCS as the students’ legitimate representative. The rector of Cairo University, Dr. Hassan Ismail, issued a statement to this effect on 23 January.Footnote 148 The students were duly invited to parliament, where a 200-strong delegation presented its demands. Momentously, they left with promises that the press would publish them in amended form the following day.

The students’ position proved too much for the new regime to bear, however, and the sit-in was broken by force at dawn on 24 January. Hundreds were arrested from both the Cairo and Ain Shams campuses, and hundreds more from Tahrir Square, where they had gathered in protest later and the following day. The uprising now became headline news and sparked a national conversation. Here, again, the Palestinian thread was intact. Prominent professional syndicates, parliamentarians, and intellectuals all issued sympathetic statements, which echoed the students in the breadth of issues raised.Footnote 149 The Lawyers’ Syndicate, for example, insisted on “democracy for the masses and protection for the Palestinian resistance.”Footnote 150 From critiquing relations with the U.S. to insisting on armed struggle and the need for political freedoms, the students appeared to have sketched the outlines of a wide-ranging counter-agenda with great public resonance.

Sadat would have to use speeches—by turns cajoling or condemning the students, the state-sponsored media, and further repression to stifle the revolt in subsequent months.Footnote 151 Indeed, as various analysts agree, Sadat could ultimately only neutralize the sting of such mass protest—at least temporarily—by moving to fight the October War of 1973.Footnote 152 As Aijaz Ahmad put it, “the rising tide of worker-student militancy, particularly in early 1973, showed that Sadat’s only chance of arresting the growth of a mass movement was to outflank the Left from a position of the farther Left: by launching, for example, a war before the universities reopened in mid-October.”Footnote 153 Thus, in accounting for the launch of the October War, attending to the popular level enhances—not least on the question of timing—elite-focused explanations of Sadat’s authorization of the war plan. These have analyzed Sadat’s plan as a surprise but limited attack, calculated to jumpstart negotiations.Footnote 154 The above account brings into the frame, alongside the Israelis and Americans, the perspective and influence of the Egyptian people, in their historical context. Indeed, after the war, Sadat worked assiduously to tighten his grip on political expression in the country, introducing a carefully controlled multipartism, but also pursuing overt and clandestine policies of Islamist incorporation to counterbalance the left-nationalist current and increasingly delegitimize it.Footnote 155

Conclusion

I saw the university youths, good lads

Ahmad, Bahaa’, Kurdi, Zayn

Deprived even of their sight

Blindfolded in broad daylight

O Bahiyya, cry over the laws

And I met Siham in the words of a man

Chiselled and set on the wall

About Egypt and the workers of Helwan

The wronged of this age, in jail

O Bahiyya, cry over the laws

And I met Ezzat and Jawad there

And Munzir and Ziad too

Four heroes who hanged the headsman

Al-Tal, Judas of the fedayeen

O our country, ululate for these prisoners

Ahmad Fu’ad Nigm, Buka’iyit Yanayir (“January’s Lament”), 1972

Egypt’s radical poet Ahmad Fuad Nigm penned this tribute to the leaders of the student uprising after meeting them at Cairo’s Citadel Prison in 1972. He had been imprisoned there for his own satirical mode of opposition to the regime,Footnote 156 and the poem became one of the most well-known songs of his oeuvre with Sheikh Imam. In it, he affectionately named the young men and women leaders of the student movement and used the well-loved epithet Bahiyya to depict Egypt crying over the unjust fates of her children. But the poem also named and celebrated the Palestinian Four, who had been imprisoned in the Citadel for assassinating Wasfi Al-Tal and whose release had become a student demand. Nigm’s words captured the spirit of the students’ uprising: its celebration of youthful agency and grit, the students’ sorrow and angry defiance at the situation in Egypt, and their sense of a unity of fate with Palestinians. The poem further juxtaposed a sense of confinement in Egypt with one of action and impact on the part of the Palestinians, and moved from mourning with the Egyptian prisoners to rejoicing with the fedayeen. The arc of its refrain—from tears to joy—reflects clearly the influence of the Palestinian resistance on the Egyptian students.

During the transition from Abdel Nasser to Sadat, the visions and modes of the students’ solidarity with Palestine had responded dynamically to the evolving position of the Egyptian state, and to their own encounters with the Palestinian struggle. In the Egypt of the 1960s, decades of nationalist politics had maintained Palestine’s central place within a wider map of Arab solidarities against imperialism. Future student leaders were moved to act in part by these inherited affective histories, and by expectations of the state that it appeared to have become unable to fulfill after 1967. With the rise of the Palestinian Revolution in the same period, these students looked to the fedayeen for inspiration and emotional strength, feeling their solidarities with Palestinians to have become more equal, and their roles reversed. Sadat’s abrupt upheavals then recast the state as unwilling, rather than unable, to meet popular expectations, and the roles reversed again. Now the students themselves would need to take the initiative to defend the Palestinian Revolution, whose affective power steeled them towards an unprecedented confrontation. Constructing their solidarities entailed defying political restrictions on campus and calling out the president’s disregard of the popular will. In January 1972, the infrastructure of Palestine solidarity that students had built on Egyptian campuses extended into Egyptian associational and cultural life and challenged the legitimacy of the entire regime. In this sense, the history of the Egyptian student movement tells us an important chapter of the history of the Palestinian Revolution and its regional reverberations in turn.

What can the student movement story tell us, then, about solidarity in geographically proximate, and politically and culturally long connected, spaces? On the one hand, it shows that existing political and cultural traditions can provide familiar scripts with significant affective power, ready for activists to use to make sense of their situation, and to adapt. On the other hand, even where there are familiar scripts, affects, and principled expectations, solidarity relations must still be actively forged, and so take different forms and trajectories accordingly. Palestine had indeed provided budding activists with a ready terrain for practical action on campus, as it provoked mobilizing affective responses in the student body and was associated with certain principled solidarity practices from the past. In Ghali Shoukri’s words, “the Arab character of the rebirth of the student movement in Egypt was a symbol loaded with history.”Footnote 157 At the same time, what the Egyptian students considered an Arab field of shared meaning was in fact constituted by contingent affective solidarity relations that they had to forge and sustain, in pursuit of principles such as justice and dignity and in the face of powerful regime and imperialist forces. These affective solidarities were conceived and expressed by actively interpellating local cultural signs and knowledge with others from international struggles, some historically grounded but others of the moment and its post-1967 affective valence. Palestine was, and remained, the central node in these relations.

The active nature of solidarity building means that limits can appear, and solidarities can dissipate, and moreover that affects associated with one solidarity relation may circulate anew to different contexts. Sherry Ortner has warned of the pitfalls of romanticizing resistance, and the need to understand both its ambiguities and potential using thick ethnography.Footnote 158 Taking a long historical perspective provides this thickness and underlines both the complex, “sometimes contradictory” ways in which solidarity connections are built and their mutuality over time.Footnote 159 In the Egyptian story, there were both contradictions and limits to the students’ engagement. Their rhetorical celebrations of armed resistance did not always arise from detailed reckonings with Egypt or the PLO’s military and strategic situation, nor did they entail a total break with the state. Many students arguably gleaned their preference for Fateh from the state’s own cues. Under Abdel Nasser, they did not wish to change the contours of Egypt’s geographies of solidarity, but rather to experience drawing their lines themselves through direct interactions forged from below. In many ways, this was primarily an expression of protest and aspiration, and a source of joy and hope amidst the darker affective landscape of the defeat. Nor was this a linear trajectory: many recount their initial skepticism or ignorance, their motivations lying mainly in grievances at their own unpromising futures, as well as the disengagement of many fellow students. The students’ commitment did not extend to signing themselves up to serve in the Palestinian struggle either—they saw their solidarity as rooted in, and flowing from, Egypt, and most continued to nurture aspirations to employment and family life at home.

And yet, emphasizing the historical nature of the Egyptian-Palestinian relationship, juxtaposed with the threats posed to it by Anwar Sadat in the period 1970–1972, generates a vivid picture of solidarity and its political potential. At a critical juncture, when official resources began to be diverted towards an “Egypt-first” settlement, the emphasis of thousands of Egyptian students on the righteousness of the Palestinian cause, and Egyptians’ affinity to it, carried both serious risk and profound political meaning. Student leaders were well aware that their activities could lead to arrest and had witnessed the imprisonment and forced conscription of their 1968 forerunners.Footnote 160 Their uprising nevertheless signaled an insistence on a certain horizontalism and equal reciprocity in Egypt’s relations with the Palestinian people, which directly challenged the highest authorities in the country. It helped to focus a national conversation on what was at stake in this liminal moment between two diverging political orders. In so doing, it inserted a critical popular factor into the calculations of a president seeking to realize a unilateral transformation of Egypt’s domestic, regional, and international affairs, and its national narratives.

The students’ story thus effectively dismantles the “death of pan-Arabism” thesis, revealing instead the ongoing vitality and coexistence of multiple scales of national identification in Egypt, beyond 1967 and beyond the death of Abdel Nasser. Just like the “students of the world” negotiating their personal and political freedoms across Africa and Asia, the uprising places young Egyptians and Palestinians within a broader landscape of global anticolonial politics, while locating their mobilizations in the particularities of the Arab scale.Footnote 161 And just like the students of May 1968, their uprising “was an event with a long preparation” and an “immediate afterlife.”Footnote 162 Abdel Nasser had given voice to a popular feeling about Palestine that long predated and immediately survived him, in the hands of differing actors, encountering changing stakes. Examining these political dynamics through the lens of affective solidarity can thus illuminate the fortunes of Egyptian popular struggles not only in the 1970s but also in the decades since, as well as broader histories of South-South solidarity.

Acknowledgements

I wish to thank Salwa Ismail, Nathaniel George, Mica Nava, Hilary Sapire, Hesham Sallam, and the anonymous reviewers at CSSH for their incisive feedback on various drafts of this article. I also thank the editorial team at CSSH for their kind support with its publication.

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3 This was asserted in English scholarship early on by Fuad Ajami in The Arab Predicament: Arabic Political Thought and Practice since 1967 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981) and Bassam Tibi in Arab Nationalism: A Critical Enquiry (Houndsmills: Macmillan, 1981). See also Elie Podeh, The Quest for Hegemony in the Arab World: The Struggle over the Baghdad Pact (Leiden: Brill, 1995), 13; Adeed Dawisha, “Requiem for Arab Nationalism,” Middle East Quarterly 10, 1 (2003); Avraham Sela, “Nasser’s Regional Politics: A Reassessment,” in Elie Podeh and Onn Winckler, eds., Rethinking Nasserism: Revolution and Historical Memory in Egypt (Gainsville: University of Florida Press, 2004), 179–204, 183; Rashid Khalidi, “The 1967 War and the Demise of Arab Nationalism: Chronicle of a Death Foretold,” in William Roger Louis and Avi Shlaim, eds., The 1967 War: Origins and Consequences (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), 264–84.

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8 For extended accounts, the first authored by a leading student activist, see Ahmed Abdalla, The Student Movement and National Politics in Egypt, 1923–1973 (London: Zed/Al-Saqi Books, 1985) and Ghali Shoukri, Egypt: Portrait of a President, 1971–81, The Counter-Revolution in Egypt (London: Zed, 1981). See also Sallam, Hesham, Classless Politics: Islamist Movements, The Left, and Authoritarian Legacies in Egypt (New York: Columbia University Press, 2022): 5156, 68–69.10.7312/sall20324CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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10 See Baker, Raymond William, Egypt’s Uncertain Revolution under Nasser and Sadat (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978): 129131 10.4159/harvard.9780674280397CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sallam, Classless Politics, 54.

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12 I conducted twenty-one interviews, seeking a balance of gender, geography, political orientation, and level of participation, while attending to the pitfalls of such belated testimonies.

13 See Mahler, Anne Garland, From the Tricontinental to the Global South: Race, Radicalism, and Transnational Solidarity (Durham: Duke University Press, 2018)10.1215/9780822371717CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Maasri, Zeina, Bergin, Cathy, and Burke, Francesca, eds., Transnational Solidarity: Anticolonialism in the Global Sixties (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2022)10.7765/9781526161574CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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15 See Asef Bayat, “Is There a Youth Politics?” Middle East––Topics and Arguments 9 (2017): 16–24; Selim, Samah, “Translator’s Introduction,” in Arwa Salih, The Stillborn. Notebooks of a Woman from the Student-Movement Generation in Egypt (New York: Seagull Books, 2017), viixxvii Google Scholar; Gervasio, Gennaro, “Marxism or Left-wing Nationalism: The New Left in Egypt in the 1970s,” in Guirguis, Laure, ed., The Arab Lefts: Histories and Legacies, 1950s–1970s (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020), 148–68.10.1515/9781474454261-012CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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19 Wilder, Gary, Freedom Time: Negritude, Decolonization, and the Future of the World (Durham: Duke University Press, 2015)Google Scholar; Getachew, Adom, Worldmaking After Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019)Google Scholar; cf. Mahler, From the Tricontinental to the Global South, and Maasri, Bergin, and Burke, Transnational Solidarity; Sapire, Hilary, “Liberation Movements, Exile, and International Solidarity: An Introduction,” Journal of Southern African Studies 35, 2 (2009): 271–86.10.1080/03057070902919843CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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26 See Featherstone, Solidarity, 30–37; Doreen Massey, “Geographies of Solidarities,” in Nigel Clark, Doreen Massey, and Phillip Sarre, eds., Material Geographies: A World in the Making (Milton Keynes: Open University Press: 2006), 311–62.

27 Tariq al-Bishri, “Misr fi Itar al-Haraka al-‘Arabiyya,” [Egypt within the Arab Movement], in Saad Eddin Ibrahim, ed., Misr wa-l-‘Uruba wa Thawrat Yulyu [Egypt, Arabism and the July Revolution] (Beirut: Dar al-Mustaqbal al-‘Arabi, 1982), 35–36; James Jankowski, “Egyptian Responses to the Palestine Problem in the Interwar Period,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 12, 1 (1980): 9–38.

28 Sayigh, Anis, Al-Fikra al-‘Arabiyya fi Misr  [The Arab Idea in Egypt] (Beirut: Haykal Press, 1959): 198.Google Scholar

29 See Talhami, Ghada Hashem, Palestine and Egyptian National Identity (New York: Praeger, 1992), 17.Google Scholar

30 Sayigh describes Arab enthusiasm for Egypt’s leadership on both official and popular levels in Al-Fikra, 154–55.

31 Sayigh, Al-Fikra, 199; Talhami, Palestine and Egyptian National Identity, 42–45.

32 Jankowski, “Egyptian Responses to the Palestine Problem,” 23.

33 Badran, Margot, “Competing Agenda: Feminists, Islam and the State in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Egypt,” in Kandiyoti, Deniz, ed., Women, Islam and the State (London: Macmillan, 1991), 211.Google Scholar

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35 See Jacob, Wilson, Working Out Egypt: Effendi Masculinity and Subject Formation in Colonial Modernity, 1870–1940 (Durham: Duke University Press, 2011), 121–22.Google Scholar

36 Jankowski, “Egyptian Responses to the Palestine Problem,” 20.

37 Talhami, Palestine and Egyptian National Identity, 54.

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41 Botman, The Rise of Egyptian Communism, 89–90.

42 See Baker, Egypt’s Uncertain Revolution, 29.

43 See Nasser, Abdel, “Nasser’s Memoirs of the First Palestine War,” Walid Khalidi trans. Journal of Palestine Studies 2, 2 (1973): 419.Google Scholar

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45 Fathi al-Deeb, ‘Abd al-Nasir wa-Tahrir al-Mashriq al-‘Arabi [Abdel Nasser and the Liberation of the Arab East] (Cairo: Al-Ahram, 2000), 189–90.

46 Abou-El-Fadl, Reem, “Building Egypt’s Afro-Asian Hub: Infrastructures of Solidarity and the 1957 Cairo Conference,” Journal of World History 30, 1–2 (2019): 157192.10.1353/jwh.2019.0016CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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51 Abd Al-Qadir Yassin, ‘Umr f-il-Manfa [A Life in Exile] (Cairo: Dar Al-Wataniyya Al-Gadida, 2009), 91; Sorcha Thompson, “Worldmaking in the Palestinian Radio Stations (1965–1982): Revolutionary Love and Anticolonial Afterlives,” The Global South 15, 2 (2022): 99–116.

52 “The Gravest Speech by Abdel Nasser on Palestine,” Al-Ahram, 1 June 1965, 1–2.

53 Ghazi al-Khalili, “Sahafat al-Muqawama fi ‘Ashar Sanawat” [The Resistance Press Over Ten Years], Shu’un Filastiniyya 41/42 (1975): 484–514.

54 Yassin, ‘Umr f-il-Manfa, 83.

55 Ahmad Salah Al-Mulla, Al-Yasar Al-Misri Bayna Abd Al-Nasir was-Sadat [The Egyptian Left Between Abdel Nasser and Sadat] (Cairo: Misr Al-Nahda, 2015), 322, 346.

56 Stoler, Ann Laura, “Affective States,” in Nugent, David and Vincent, Joan, eds., A Companion to the Anthropology of Politics (New York: Blackwell, 2004), 420.Google Scholar

57 Emblematic songs include Dhikrayat [Memories] (1960), Al-Watan Al-Akbar [The Great Homeland] (1960), Ya Ahlan B-il-Ma‘arik [Welcome, Battles] (1965), and Matalib Sha‘b [A People’s Demands] (1966). See also Massad, Joseph, “Liberating Songs: Putting Palestine to Music,” Journal of Palestine Studies 32, 3 (Spring 2003): 2225.10.1525/jps.2003.32.3.21CrossRefGoogle Scholar

58 This was Fatat Min Filastin [A Girl from Palestine] by Mahmud Zu-l-Fiqar: Viola Shafik, “Cinema in Palestine,” in Oliver Leaman, ed., Companion Encyclopedia of Middle Eastern and North African Film (London: Routledge, 2001), 518–32.

59 Radwan, Noha, “Palestine in Egyptian Colloquial Poetry,” Journal of Palestine Studies 40, 4 (2011): 6177 10.1525/jps.2011.XL.4.61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

60 See Fathi Imbabi, Jil Al-Sab‘inat: Al-Rawafid Al-Thaqafiyya wa-l-Ijtima‘iyya wa-l-Siyasiyya, Nadwa [The 1970s Generation: The Cultural, Social and Political Tributaries, A Debate] Chapter One: Intellectual Tributaries Discussion, March 1997 (Cairo: Markaz Al-Fustat, 2001), 25–27.

61 See Abd Al-Ghaffar Shukr, Munazamat Al-Shabab Al-Ishtiraki: Tajruba Misiriyya Fi-E‘dad Al-Qiyadat [The Socialist Youth Organization: An Egyptian Experiment in Leadership Training, 1963-76] (Beirut: Markaz Dirasat Al-Wihda Al-Arabiyya, 2004).

62 Bahaa’ Sha‘baan and Abdalla, Al-Haraka Al-Tulabiyya Al-Haditha fi-Misr: Tajribat Rub‘ Qarn [The Modern Student Movement in Egypt: The Experience of a Quarter of a Century] (Cairo: Al-Jil, 1997), 17.

63 See Ismael, Tareq and Said, Rifaat, The Communist Movement in Egypt, 1920–1988 (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1990), 131.Google Scholar

64 Kamal Khalil, Hekayat Min Zaman Faat [Stories from Bygone Times] (Cairo: Bayt Al-Yasmin, 2012), 223. See Baker, Sadat and After: Struggles for Egypt’s Political Soul (London: IB Tauris, 1990), 79–162.

65 Hayat Al-Shimi, Interview, Cairo, 1 Apr. 2017.

66 Mohamed Abdel Shakur et al. “War and Forced Migration in Egypt: The Experience of Evacuation from the Suez Canal Cities (1967–1976),” Arab Studies Quarterly 27, 3 (2005): 21–39.

67 Muhammad Al-Baghdadi, Interview, Cairo, 2 Apr. 2017.

68 Shukrallah, Interview, Cairo, 1 April 2017; Sha‘baan, Interview. Shukrallah had a unique profile: as the son of the Arab League’s representative in Ottawa and New York, he was raised in an Arab nationalist household but had spent five years amongst Euro-American left and Black Power movements in Canada before coming to Cairo University.

69 Imbabi, Interview, Cairo, 3 Apr. 2017.

70 See footnote 3.

71 Wael Uthman, Asrar Al-Haraka Al-Tulabiyya: Handasat Al-Qahira 1968-1975 [The Secrets of the Student Movement: Cairo University Engineering Faculty, 1968-1975] (Cairo: Al-Shirka Al-Misriyya, 2006); Hossam Tammam, Shahid ‘ala Tarikh al-Haraka al-Islamiyya fi-Misr: 1970–1984 [Witness to the History of the Islamic Movement in Egypt: 1970–1984] (Cairo: Dar al-Shuruq, 2010); Al-Arian, Answering the Call, 49–74.

72 See Al-Arian, Answering the Call, 138–40; Sallam, Classless Politics, 124–25.

73 Shukrallah, Interview.

74 The Egyptian economy was suffering the loss of the Sinai oilfields, Suez Canal revenues, and reduced tourism. See Galal Amin, “Adjustment and Development: The Case of Egypt,” in Said El-Naggar, ed., Adjustment Policies and Development Strategies in the Arab World (USA: International Monetary Fund, 1987), 99–100. On the economic costs of the war effort, see Sallam, Classless Politics, 30 n42.

75 Sha‘baan, Inhaztu l-i-l-Watan: Shahada Min Jil Al-Ghadab, 1967-1977 [I Chose My Country’s Side: A Testimony from the Generation of Rage, 1967–1977] (Cairo: Al-Mahrusa, 1998), 89.

76 See Anouar Abdel Malek. Egypt: Military Society: The Army Regime, the Left and Social Change Under Nasser (New York: Random House, 1968), 30–34; Abdalla, The Student Movement, 78–87.

77 On 21 February, incidentally National Students Day, Helwan munitions factory workers protested the lenient sentences given to airforce commanders implicated in 1967. When some were arrested, Cairo and Alexandria University students organized solidarity demonstrations, demanding their release, and broader political freedoms. See Abdalla, The Student Movement, 149–59; Hisham Salamuni, Al-Jil Aladhi Wajaha Abd Al-Nasir wa-l-Sadat [The Generation that Confronted Abdel Nasser and Sadat] (Cairo: Qabaa’, 1999), 125–26.

78 Zayn Al-Abidin Fuad, Interview, Cairo, 4 Apr. 2017. Despite government concessions, November brought more protests in Mansura, after a new law tightening university admissions criteria. The authorities’ crackdown meant the protests spread, particularly to Alexandria University. A strike in the city on 25 November was put down violently, in contrast to the police’s relative restraint in February. See Abdalla, The Student Movement, 159–75.

79 Students won the right to this political expression after the 1968 protests: Khalil, Hekayat Min Zaman Faat, 86–87.

80 Hisham, Min Tarikh, 100.

81 Shukrallah, Interview.

82 “Report from the Palestine National Council,” Al-Ahram, 20 July 1968, 3.

83 Sayigh, Yezid, Armed Struggle and the Search for State: The Palestinian National Movement, 1949–1993 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 177–78.Google Scholar

84 “Israeli Forces Cross the Jordan River in a Dangerous Military Operation,” Al-Ahram, 22 Mar. 1968, 1.

85 Sayigh, Armed Struggle, 179–182.

86 Hisham, Min Tarikh, 107.

87 Sha‘baan, Inhaztu, 54.

88 Sayigh, Armed Struggle, 181.

89 Lutfi Al-Khuli, “Al-Muqawama Awalan” [The Resistance First], Al-Tali‘a (Dec. 1968): 5–8.

90 Shukrallah, Interview.

91 Saad Zahran, “Manabe‘ Al-Ilham Al-Fikri wa-l-Nidali” [Sources of Inspiration in Thought and Struggle], Al-Tali‘a (Aug. 1968): 36–71.

92 Evyn Lê Espiritu Ghandi, Archipelago of Resettlement: Vietnamese Refugee Settlers and Decolonization across Guam and Israel-Palestine (California: University of California Press, 2022), 31–32.

93 Sha‘baan, Interview.

94 Heikal argued that Egypt did not share Vietnam’s natural geography, nor comparable levels of foreign assistance. See “An al-Ahkam, wa-l-Muzaharat, wa-E‘adat al-Ahkam!” [On the Trials, Demonstrations, and Retrials!], Al-Ahram, 1 Mar. 1968, 1, 3.

95 See “Eid: With Those in Qantara, on the Border with the Enemy,” Al-Ahram, 11 Mar. 1968, 3.

96 Galal Maqlid, Interview, Alexandria, 6 Apr. 2017.

97 See Sayigh, Armed Struggle, 196–202. See Interview, Muhammad Al-Shabba and Ahmad Sayyid Hassan, Cairo, 3 Apr. 2017; Maqlid and Al-Shabba, Personal Correspondence, Apr. 2025.

98 Fuad, Online Interview, 11 May 2025.

99 See Law 55, Popular Defence Organisations, 3 Oct. 1968, Al-Jarida Al-Rasmiyya, 13 Oct. 1968, 664–66; Michel Kamil, “Jaysh Al-Difa‘ Al-Sha‘bi” [The Popular Defense Army], Al-Tali‘a (Dec. 1968): 58–65.

100 Alaa Bakish testimony in Hisham, Min Tarikh, 59.

101 According to Hisham, the name “Squirrel” came from a Nazim Hikmet poem, Interview, Cairo, 3 Apr. 2017. This is most likely Yaşamaya Dair [On Living] (1948), which begins: “Living is no laughing matter:/ you must live with great seriousness/ like a squirrel, for example. …”

102 Hisham, Min Tarikh, 112.

103 Alaa Bakish testimony in Hisham, Min Tarikh, 61.

104 Hisham, Min Tarikh, 114. These were the code names of Arafat (Abu Ammar), Khalaf (Abu Iyad), and al-Qaddumi (Abul Lutuf).

105 See “Ru’yat Al-Muqawama Al-Filastiniyya li-l-‘Aduw” [The Palestinian Resistances’ View on the Enemy], Al-Tali‘a (June 1969): 9–103.

106 Hisham, 115.

107 See Massad, Joseph, Colonial Effects: The Making of National Identity in Jordan (New York: Columbia University Press, 2001), 233–47.Google Scholar

108 Hisham, Min Tarikh, 118. Qaddumi presented this study at the Arab Lawyers Association Conference in Khartoum in 1969.

109 See Fathi Imbabi, Siham Sabri: Zahrat Al-Haraka Al-Tulabiyya, Jil Al-Sab‘inat [Siham Sabri: Rose of the Student Movement, the 1970s Generation] (Cairo: Merit, 2004).

110 Saleh Abdel Jawad, Online Interview, 28 July 2023.

111 Al-Shabba and Hassan, Interview.

112 See Sha‘baan, Inhaztu, 75.

113 See Elliott Colla, “Elegy and Mobilization: Poetry, Mourning, and the Student Uprising of January 1972,” Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics 42 (2022): 85–118.

114 Khalil, Hekayat Min Zaman Faat, 72–75.

115 Fuad, Online Interview.

116 Sha‘baan, Inhaztu, 88.

117 Hinnebusch, Raymond, Egyptian Politics Under Sadat: The Post-Populist Development of an Authoritarian-Modernizing State (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985), 46.Google Scholar

118 Al-Mulla, Al-Yasar Al-Misri, 84–87; Hinnebusch, Egyptian Politics Under Sadat, 133; Beattie, Egypt During the Sadat Years, 74–75, 81, 86.

119 See Al-Mulla, Al-Yasar Al-Misri, 86–87.

120 Abdalla, The Student Movement, 178.

121 “Statement Number One,” cited in Sha‘baan, Jama‘at Ansar Al-Thawra Al-Filastiniyya: Al-Qisa Al-Haqiqiyya [The Partisans of the Palestinian Revolution Society: The True Story] (unpublished manuscript, n.d.), 19.

122 Sha‘baan, Al-Qisa.

123 Hisham, Min Tarikh, 120–21.

124 Fuad, Abdel Jawad, Interviews.

125 Khalil, Hekayat Min Zaman Faat, 85; Sha‘baan, Al-Qisa, 5.

126 Interview, Muhammad Mandur, Cairo, Apr. 2017.

127 Hisham, Interview.

128 Khalil, Hekayat Min Zaman Faat, 85.

129 See Sha‘baan in Imbabi, Jil Al-Sab‘inat, 29, Conversation with Hani, 7–8; Gervasio, “Marxism or Left-wing Nationalism.”

130 Sha‘baan, Al-Qisa, 12.

131 See Interview, Hisham.

132 Shukrallah, Interview.

133 The invitations they distributed were signed by the faculty secretary and cultural committee president. The venue, a small theatre behind Cairo’s National Theatre, was chosen to accommodate Darwish’s refusal to speak on campus after various students had questioned him robustly about why he left occupied Palestine following his arrival in Cairo in 1971: Fuad, Interview. See also Sayyid Mahmud, Al-Matn Al-Majhul: Mahmud Darwish fi-Misr [The Unknown Text: Mahmoud Darwish in Egypt] (Cairo: Al-Mutawasit, 2020), 112, 140.

134 Shoukri, Egypt, 102.

135 Sha‘baan, Inhaztu, 57.

136 Ibid.; Sallam, Classless Politics, 52.

137 Shoukri, Egypt, 103.

138 “Political Statement to the Student Masses,” Cairo University Faculty of Arts Students Committee Statement, ca. 19 Jan. 1972.

139 Sha‘baan, Inhaztu, 97.

140 Ibid.

141 Ross, Kristin, May ‘68 and its Afterlives (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2002), 92.10.7208/chicago/9780226728001.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar

142 Sha‘baan, Inhaztu, 94–95. See Abdel Malek, Egypt: Military Society, 23–26; Abdalla, The Student Movement, 62–78; Beinin, Joel and Lockman, Zachary, Workers on the Nile: Nationalism, Communism, Islam, and the Egyptian Working Class, 1882–1954 (Cairo: American University in Cairo Press, 1998), 341–42Google Scholar. For an important antecedent, see Aaron Jakes, “Peaceful Wars and Unlikely Unions: The Azhar Strike of 1909 and the Politics of Comparison in Egypt,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 65, 1 (2023): 141–66.

143 Shoukri, Egypt, 103.

144 Fuad, Online Interview.

145 Arts Statement; Cairo University Faculty of Engineering Students Committee Statement, ca. 19 Jan. 1972.

146 The phrase was coined in haste at the Cairo University Faculty of Economics and Political Science conference, whose student committee Abdalla led, and which called for the university-wide meeting of 20 January. See Abdalla, The Student Movement, 179 n18.

147 Sha‘baan, Al-Qisa, 14; Sallam, Classless Politics, 54.

148 Hassan Ismail, “Important Statement from the Rector of Cairo University,” 23 Jan. 1972.

149 Shoukri, Egypt, 107–8; Abdalla, The Student Movement, 186–87.

150 Shoukri, Egypt, 107.

151 See Abdalla, The Student Movement, 188–211.

152 See inter alia Beattie, Egypt During the Sadat Years, 133; Sallam, Classless Politics, 54; Baker, Egypt’s Uncertain Revolution, 130.

153 Aijaz Ahmad, “The Arab Stasis,” Monthly Review (1975): 42–56.

154 See Shlaim, Avi, The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arabs (London: Penguin, 2014), 319, 323–34Google Scholar; Brownlee, Jason, Democracy Prevention: The Politics of the US-Egyptian Alliance (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), 1922 10.1017/CBO9781139198721CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

155 For a detailed analysis, see Sallam, Classless Politics, 71–143.

156 Ahmad Fuad Nigm, Al-Fagumi: Al-Sira Al-Dhatiyya Al-Kamila [Al-Fagumi: The Complete Autobiography] (Cairo: Dar Al-Ahmadi, 2003); Marilyn Booth, “Exploding into the Seventies: Ahmad Fu’ad Nigm, Sheikh Imam, and the Aesthetics of a New Youth Politics,” in Nicholas S. Hopkins, ed., Political and Social Protest in Egypt (Cairo: American University in Cairo Press), 19–44.

157 Shoukri, Egypt, 102.

158 Sherry Ortner, “Resistance and the Problem of Ethnographic Refusal,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 37, 1 (1995): 173–93.

159 Diarmaid Kelliher, “Historicising Geographies of Solidarity,” Geography Compass (2018): 6; Diarmaid Kelliher “Constructing a Culture of Solidarity: London and the British Coalfields in the Long 1970s,” Antipode 49, 1 (2017): 106–7.

160 Interview, Ahmad Abd al-Rahman, Cairo, 12 Dec. 2017.

161 See Monaville, Pedro, Students of the World: Global Decolonization in the Congo (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2022)Google Scholar; Zeleke, Elleni, Ethiopia in Theory: Revolution and Knowledge Production, 1964–2016 (Leiden: Brill, 2019).Google Scholar

162 Ross, May ’68, 26.